4.6 Article

Effects of additional blood pressure and lipid measurements on the prediction of cardiovascular risk

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 6, Pages 1474-1485

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1177/1741826711424494

Keywords

Blood pressure; cardiovascular diseases; cholesterol; reproducibility of results; risk assessment; risk factors

Funding

  1. NHLBI
  2. FHS
  3. FOS Study Investigators
  4. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council [402764]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: Current guidelines recommend that decisions to start preventative therapy for cardiovascular disease (CVD) should be based on absolute risk; however, current risk equations are based on single measurements of risk factors. We aimed to assess whether two measurements of blood pressure and lipids improves the prediction of cardiovascular risk compared to one measurement. Methods and results: We used sex-specific Cox proportional hazards models to evaluate the risk of first CVD event in 2385 participants of the Framingham Offspring Study attending both the second and third visits. We estimated the effects on risk prediction of using the average of two measurements of blood pressure, total cholesterol, and HDL cholesterol compared to using one measurement of the risk factors. We found that these risk factors were each markedly more predictive of CVD when the average of two measurements was used rather than one measurement and age was less predictive of CVD. There were small improvements in the overall model fit, discrimination, and calibration. Reclassification also showed small improvements across the risk spectrum (net reclassification information, NRI, for women 3.0%, 95% CI - 0.9 to 24.8%; NRI for men 4.0%, 95% CI - 2.2 to 14.1%) and possibly greater improvements for intermediate-risk individuals (NRI for women 32.3%, 95% CI - 21.9 to 46.8%; NRI for men 16.0%, 95% CI - 3.3 to 43%). Conclusions: Averaging two measurements of blood pressure and lipids results in marked increases in the predictiveness of these risk factors and smaller improvements in the overall prediction of cardiovascular risk including reclassification.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available